In an era of manufactured personas, one voice refuses to whisper. He doesn’t introduce himself with a title. No “artist,” no “visionary,” no “disruptor.” When the Zoom call connects, a man in a worn leather jacket leans back against a cracked plaster wall, steam rising from a chipped ceramic mug. “Just Hanzel,” he says. “The ‘Bold’ is for the people who forgot how to be.”
Yet he sells out theaters from Warsaw to Vancouver. Why? hanzel bold
He stands up. The interview is over, not rudely, but completely. In an era of manufactured personas, one voice
Because the work hits .
“I don’t write hooks,” he says. “I write doorways. You walk through or you don’t.” Visually, Hanzel cultivates what his creative director calls “honest decay.” Frayed cuffs. Hand-painted leather. A single silver earring forged from a melted-down padlock. He collaborates only with small, ethical designers—most famously the Oaxaca-based collective Mano Negra . “Just Hanzel,” he says
But who is he, really? The surname “Bold” was not a stage choice. It was a dare.